GoTriangle announces new park-and-ride facility opens at Wake Tech’s Southern Wake Campus
GoTriangle has announced the opening of a new park-and-ride facility on Wake Tech’s Southern Wake Campus—the result of a partnership among agencies committed to increasing access to education and employment opportunities in Wake County, N.C.
Transit advocates and elected officials gathered to celebrate the opening of the new facility.
“Fuquay-Varina residents and others who live in southern Wake County now have a direct connection to the Wake Tech Campus, and any day we can help improve people’s access to education is a good day,” said GoTriangle President and CEO Charles Lattuca. “Mobility is often the key to helping people reach the next rung of success, and we want to thank our board for their leadership and all of our partners who worked so hard to make this facility a reality.”
Wake County, the town of Fuquay-Varina, Wake Tech, GoTriangle, GoRaleigh and the city of Raleigh worked together to create the new park-and-ride facility, which provides a shelter, bench and designated parking spaces for students and community residents using transit to access the campus or downtown Raleigh.
The new park-and-ride lot replaces a park and ride at the Hilltop Food Lion in Fuquay-Varina that customers of GoTriangle’s Route FRX or Fuquay-Varina Express had used. The FRX route, operated by GoRaleigh, runs between Fuquay-Varina and downtown Raleigh during peak hours on weekdays.
GoTriangle and Wake Tech have worked together on other projects to help remove transportation as a barrier to education.
In March 2020, they signed an agreement to offer a GoPass to all Wake Tech students and employees, allowing them to ride free on any public transit route in the Triangle. Wake Tech already had an agreement with GoRaleigh, which provides an express service between GoRaleigh Station and the Wake Tech Southern Campus weekdays from 6:15 a.m. to 6:15 p.m.
In August 2019, GoTriangle started Route 310, which provides direct access every 30 minutes each weekday from the Regional Transit Center to Wake Tech’s new RTP campus and other Perimeter Park stops. Route 310 had been suspended because of COVID-19 restrictions but returned to service Oct. 12.
Wake Tech is North Carolina’s largest community college with six campuses and three training centers across the county.
“Our students commute from all across Wake County to pursue degrees and credentials that can change their lives,” said Wake Tech President Scott Ralls. “This new park-and-ride will provide another way for students to get to campus, eliminating what could be a barrier to their success.”
The transit network across Wake County will continue growing each year as part of the Wake Transit Plan, which voters approved in 2016.